Professor
 James Thompson of the University of Toronto in Canada observed that 
pollination of some plants has dramatically decreased in the last 17 
years, some by as much as 50%. 
His study in the Rocky Mountains 
of Colorado, USA is one of the longest-ever observations of the 
pollination process. He comments that although bee numbers have 
declined, what was most crucial was that climate change has driven the 
plants and flowers to open at times that are no longer matched to when 
the bees 
emerge from hibernation to pollinate them. 
Other 
insects vital to pollination, such as butterflies, have also suffered 
declines due to habitat loss and climate change. Professor James 
Thompson said: “This is sobering because it suggests that pollination is
 vulnerable even in a relatively pristine environment that is free of 
pesticides and human disturbance but still subject 
to climate change.” 
Such
 a finding is especially alarming as one-third of the world’s fruits and
 vegetables depend on pollinators including bees to flower and grow. Our
 gratitude Professor James Thompson for this comprehensive study that 
reflects another aspect of the disturbing implications of climate change
 on our natural world. 
Let us turn toward conscientious 
decisions and concern for the environment that ease these conditions and
 restore our pristine planet. During an August 2009 videoconference in 
Thailand, Supreme Master Ching Hai spoke about the important roles of 
all animal species, including the bees, while also noting their keen 
awareness of human-caused climate change and what must be done about it.
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 It is almost too much to try to convey the importance of each and every
 inhabitant friend to the environment as a whole. The tiny bees 
contribute to pollination, that we could not replace, not only for 
flowers but vital food crops. We cannot replace their work even, as a 
human.
The animal friends are in pollination more aware of 
climate change than we are because they are the ones on the frontlines 
holding up nature’s delicate web of life. They are also, sadly, the 
first-hand victims of global warming, as we have witnessed and 
discovered. 
They are in our hands, the humans’ hands. They know 
that the solution lies not so much in words but in daily actions, and 
the essential change that will be the most restorative for our world is 
to be vegan. 
That is the essence of what we need to stabilize 
the planet, to bless the world through our everyday benevolent actions, 
meaning be vegan.
http://www.watoday.com.au/breaking-news-world/climate-change-affecting-bees-20100906-14wz6.htmlhttp://www.physorg.com/news202966309.htmlhttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/7980954/Bee-decline-already-having-dramatic-effect-on-pollination-of-plants.htmlhttp://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/enviornment/bee-decline-could-slash-food-output-finds-study_100423925.html#ixzz0ylPRrEyV